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NCAA Latest: Get ready for a defensive-minded title game

- Apr. 11, 2019 08:55 AM EDT

Auburn forward Horace Spencer, left, fights for a loose ball with Virginia guard De'Andre Hunter during the first half in the semifinals of the Final Four NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, April 6, 2019, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Latest on the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament (all times local):

10:25 p.m.

The college basketball season will end Monday night with two defensive-minded teams battling to become a first-time champion.

Texas Tech entered the national semifinals by allowing just 84 points per 100 possessions, a defensive efficiency score on KenPom that ranks as the best the advanced-stats site has tracked dating to 2002.

Both defenses were strong in the second half of their semifinals. Texas Tech allowed Michigan State to make 8 of 24 shots, while Auburn made just 9 of 26 shots against Virginia.

It will also be a matchup of the past two Associated Press men's national coaches of the year, with Texas Tech's Chris Beard winning this year's award and Virginia's Tony Bennett claiming it last season.

— Aaron Beard reporting from Minneapolis.

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10:10 p.m.

Texas Tech has earned a trip to Monday night's championship game to face Virginia.

The Red Raiders beat Michigan State 61-51 in Saturday night's second national semifinal.

Matt Mooney scored 22 points to lead Texas Tech, which is playing in its first Final Four.

Leading scorer Jarrett Culver was quiet for much of the night, but he scored six straight points to keep the Red Raiders in control after the Spartans had cut a 13-point deficit to 52-51 with 2:54 left.

Texas Tech shot 56 percent after halftime, while its trademark defensive edge locked down on Michigan State. The Spartans shot just 32 percent, including 8 of 24 in the second half.

Cassius Winston scored 16 points to lead the Spartans.

— Aaron Beard reporting from Minneapolis.

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9:25 p.m.

The foul called with 0.6 seconds left on Auburn in the first semifinal became an instant classic, when Virginia's Kyle Guy made three free throws to give the Cavaliers a 63-62 victory.

But there was another officiating decision, or in this case non-decision, that drew heavy scrutiny from TV viewers and disgust from Tigers fans. Ty Jerome appeared to be guilty of a double dribble on his way up the court in the closing seconds, prior to the fateful play.

The NCAA said the correct call was made on the foul, but the organization declined to comment on whether or not a double dribble should have been called.

— Dave Campbell reporting from Minneapolis.

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9:05 p.m.

The NCAA says the foul on Auburn's Samir Doughty with 0.6 seconds left in the first Final Four game against Virginia was the correct call.

National coordinator of officiating J.D. Collins released a statement through the NCAA that said the whistle by official James Breeding was in accordance with Rule 4, Section 39.i. That states: "Verticality applies to a legal position and also to both the offensive and defensive players. The basic components of the principle of verticality are: The defender may not 'belly up' or use the lower part of the body or arms to cause contact outside his vertical plane or inside the opponent's vertical plane."

Doughty's foul gave Kyle Guy three free throws with the Cavaliers trailing 62-60. Guy made all three to send Virginia to the national championship game for the first time in program history.

— Dave Campbell reporting from Minneapolis.

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8:55 p.m.

Surprise, surprise! Defense is the name of the game again tonight, with Texas Tech's stifling half-court pressure enough to produce a 23-21 lead over Michigan State at halftime in the second national semifinal at U.S. Bank Stadium.

The Spartans made only one of nine field goals over the final 7½ minutes of the first period, a 3-pointer by Cassius Winston with 1:03 left. They're 7 for 23 from the field, with nine points apiece from Winston and Matt McQuaid.

The Red Raiders, who have allowed the third-fewest points per game in the nation this season, have nine points from Matt Mooney.

— Dave Campbell, reporting from Minneapolis.

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8:40 p.m.

The celebrity factor is always high at the Final Four, and Texas Tech and Michigan State each have a hotshot NFL quarterback on their side in the house in Minneapolis.

Minnesota's Kirk Cousins is cheering on his Spartans, in the same stadium where he plays for the Vikings in the fall. Kansas City's Patrick Mahomes III is rooting on his Red Raiders, with Chiefs teammate Travis Kelce sitting next to him in the seats.

Both NFL stars were shown on the scoreboard, prompting loud roars from the respective fan bases.

Cousins is third on the current NFL list of average annual contract value for quarterbacks at $28 million. Mahomes, the 2018 NFL MVP, is 32nd at $4.1 million.

— Dave Campbell, reporting from Minneapolis.

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8 p.m.

The second national semifinal game has begun at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis between Texas Tech and Michigan State, with Virginia waiting for the winner in the championship on Monday night.

Spartans coach Tom Izzo has taken his team to the Final Four for the eighth time, with point guard Cassius Winston leading the way this season after surviving the stacked East Region and defeating consensus favorite Duke, the No. 1 overall seed, in the Elite Eight.

This is the first appearance for the Red Raiders, who are coached by Chris Beard and fueled his relentlessly aggressive defensive approach. The Red Raiders also beat a No. 1 seed to get here, taking down Gonzaga in the West Region final last weekend.

— Dave Campbell, reporting from Minneapolis.

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7:25 p.m.

Several members of the Auburn student section were escorted out of U.S. Bank Stadium by police after the Tigers lost to Virginia 63-62 on three foul shots by Kyle Guy in the final second of the game.

The free throws came after the Tigers had rallied from a 10-point second-half deficit, and after it appeared that the Tigers had won the game. Guy missed a 3-pointer from the corner and the buzzer sounded, and Auburn players began spilling onto the court to celebrate.

But official James Breeding had whistled a foul on the Tigers' Samir Doughty for bumping into Guy on the shot, and that gave one of Virginia's best free-throw shooters a chance to win the game.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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7:10 p.m.

Kyle Guy made three free throws after a questionable foul call with 0.6 seconds left, and Virginia survived a frantic rally by Auburn for a 63-62 victory in the national semifinals.

The Tigers had used a 14-0 run in the closing minutes to turn what had been a 10-point deficit into a 61-57 lead with 19.3 seconds left. Guy answered with a 3-pointer to give Virginia a chance, and the Tigers' Jared Harper could only make the front end of a one-and-one with 7.4 seconds left.

Virginia was not yet in the bonus, and Auburn brilliantly used a couple of fouls to whittle time off the clock. The Cavaliers wound up with 1.5 seconds to work and got the ball to Guy, who was bumped by the Tigers' Samir Doughty on a 3-point shot from the corner.

The buzzer sounded and Auburn thought it had won, but official James Breeding had called a foul and sent Guy to the line. He made all three free throws and the Tigers' desperation heave was no good.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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6:45 p.m.

Virginia's defense is doing a good job of protecting the rim against undersized Auburn.

The Cavaliers have blocked seven shots as of midway through the second half of Saturday's national semifinal. That includes three in the paint in the second half, one being a dunk attempt that was stuffed by De'Andre Hunter.

Mamadi Diakite has blocked four shots for Virginia, which had managed seven or more blocks just twice all season. The Cavaliers' season high is eight late in the regular season against Syracuse.

— Aaron Beard reporting from Minneapolis.

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6:40 p.m.

Virginia is dictating its typical snail-like tempo, and a barrage of 3-pointers has given the Cavaliers their biggest lead of the game at 50-43 over Auburn with less than 8 minutes to go.

Meanwhile, the starting lineups are out for the second national semifinal.

Texas Tech is going with the same veteran group that propelled it to the first Final Four in school history. That means sophomores Jarrett Culver and Davide Morretti will join seniors Tariq Owens, Norense Odiase and Matt Mooney when the Red Raiders face Michigan State.

The Spartans counter with Big Ten player of the year Cassius Winston and Matt McQuaid in the backcourt, and Kenny Goins, Aaron Henry and Xavier Tillman in the frontcourt.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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6:25 p.m.

The first eight points of the second half belongd to Virginia.

So does the pace of play. And the rebounding battle. And the momentum. And most importantly, the lead. The Cavaliers have edged ahead 36-31 with 14 1/2 minutes to go in the national semifinals.

The Tigers missed their first eight shots to start the second half. They've been particularly bad from the 3-point arc, where Bryce Brown's latest miss left them 3 for 19 from 3.

Auburn coach Bruce Pearl dismissed any concerns about his sharpshooting team's ability to make shots in a football stadium, saying Thursday that the rims were "soft." They haven't been so far.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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6:15 p.m.

The second half between Auburn and Virginia is underway with a national title berth at stake.

The Tigers were just 3 of 14 from beyond the 3-point arc in the first half, though they still managed to take a 31-28 lead into the locker room. A big reason for that was their ability to get to the rim against a Virginia defense that is designed to prevent just that.

The Cavaliers are leaning on Ty Jerome, who had 13 points in the first half.

Virginia center Jack Salt played only 2 minutes in the first half because of foul trouble, and that meant a short bench for coach Tony Bennett. Salt should figure more prominently in the second half.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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5:50 p.m.

Auburn is 20 minutes away from the national title game after what might go down as one of the fastest first halves in Final Four history.

The Tigers lead Virginia 31-28 at the break. But the teams burned through the first half in less than 40 minutes of real time, thanks in part to seven total turnovers and nine total fouls.

In fact, there was never an under-4 minute media timeout because there was never a dead ball down the stretch. Missed shots were cleanly rebounded, neither team turned it over and there was never a blown whistle for a foul — so the teams kept on playing.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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5:30 p.m.

The first 10 minutes of the Final Four matchup between Auburn and Virginia is going about as expected: The Tigers are throwing up 3-pointers and the Cavaliers are slowing the pace.

The Cavaliers figured to have an advantage in the paint with Auburn missing 6-foot-8 forward Chuma Okeke to a knee injury. But the 6-10 Salt is on the bench, where he does Virginia no good.

Meanwhile, Auburn football coach Guz Malzahn got a big ovation when he was shown on the video screens inside U.S. Bank Arena.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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5:10 p.m.

The first national semifinal is underway with Auburn, fresh off a trio of wins over Kansas, North Carolina and Kentucky, taking on No. 1 seed Virginia at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.

It's the quintessential matchup of high-speed, 3-point-shooters in the Tigers against a methodical, defensive bunch of Cavaliers. It's also a matchup of the mighty SEC and hoops-mad ACC.

Auburn made a late change to its starting lineup, putting Danjel Purifoy in its first five.

The second semifinal pits Texas Tech, the regular-season co-champs of the Big 12, against Michigan State. The Red Raiders are in the Final Four for the first time while the Spartans are making their 10th appearance in the national semifinals.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis.

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4:50 p.m.

Auburn junior Jared Harper was the last player to leave the court after the Tigers and Virginia warmed up for their national semifinal. The 5-foot-11 guard made four straight deep, straight-on 3-pointers, and then a layup before jogging off the elevated court at U.S. Bank Stadium.

Once again, Auburn's Malik Dunbar was wearing Chuma Okeke's No. 5 jersey during warmups. Okeke is out with a knee injury sustained in the Sweet 16 victory against North Carolina

Auburn is in its first Final Four and Virginia its first since 1984. With both teams in blue and orange, it's hard to tell which has more fan support for the first game of the Final Four doubleheader — though by volume of cheers, the Cavaliers appear to have an edge.

— Ralph D. Russo reporting from Minneapolis.

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4:30 p.m.

The betting public is split on Virginia and Auburn in the first game of the Final Four.

Betting data released by William Hill US on Saturday night shows more wagers are being placed on Auburn on spread and money line bets, but more money for both wagers is backing Virginia.

That difference shows a split between sharp bettors gambling more money per bet and a higher number of casual bettors who wager less.

The difference is especially stark on the money line, which is minus-300 for Virginia, meaning a gambler would need to bet $300 to win $100. William Hill says 77% of wagers are backing Auburn, where a $100 bet can win $250 if the Tigers win the game outright. Still, 72% of the money is favoring Virginia to win straight up.

The money line bet between Texas Tech and Michigan State is seeing a similar divide, with sharp bettors heavily backing the Spartans (92 and more tickets on Texas Tech (58%).

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4:25 p.m.

No surprises in the starting lineups for Virginia and Auburn in the first national semifinal.

The Tigers are going with their usual backcourt in Jared Harper and Bryce Brown, while their trio of forwards will be Horace Spencer, Malik Dunbar and Anfernee McLemore.

It's been McLemore and sixth man Danjel Purifoy who have picked up the minutes in place of forward Chuma Okeke, who tore the ACL in his left knee late in a regional semifinal win over North Carolina.

Virginia is going with freshman Kihei Clark and juniors Kyle Guy and Ty Jerome in the backcourt, and De'Andre Hunter and Mamadi Diakite provide some length and ability to guard down low.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis

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3:45 p.m.

Intriguing hire or incredible troll job?

The Washington Post, citing unnamed sources, reported Saturday that Virginia Tech was on the verge of hiring UMBC's Ryan Odom as its next coach. That would be the same UMBC that became the first 16-seed to beat a No. 1 when it knocked Virginia out of the tournament a year ago.

It could also be just a ruse, though. The Baltimore Sun received a text message from Odom saying of the rumor, "Nothing to it." The newspaper also reported that two anonymous sources said the 44-year-old Odom —a longtime Virginia Tech assistant under Seth Greenberg — isn't going anywhere.

Meanwhile in Minneapolis, the Hokies' hated rivals were warming up for their Final Four matchup with Auburn.

— Dave Skretta reporting from Minneapolis

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2:20 p.m.

The NCAA will honor late AP Basketball Writer Jim O'Connell at the Final Four in Minneapolis by leaving a courtside seat open for him this weekend. O'Connell covered 39 consecutive Final Fours from 1979-2017 for AP and was one of the most knowledgeable and well-known people covering college basketball. He died in July at 64 after fighting a series of ailments in recent years.

O'Connell, known as Oc to everyone who knew him, was a member of the U.S. Basketball Writers Association Hall of Fame and he received the Curt Gowdy Award from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Before Virginia plays Auburn in the first national semifinal Saturday, a video tribute to O'Connell will be shown in U.S. Bank Stadium.

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Following an epic Elite Eight and a week of buildup, the Final Four is finally here.

Michigan State is the regular, making its eighth appearance in the national semifinals of the NCAA Tournament under Tom Izzo.

The Spartans will face Final Four newbie Texas Tech and its oxygen-sucking defense.

Virginia, the only No. 1 seed left in the bracket, is in Minneapolis to make a new kind of history after its momentous first-round fail against No. 16 seed UMBC a year ago.

The Cavaliers and their impenetrable pack-line defense will try to stop the volume-shooting Auburn Tigers, who have poured in 3-pointers during this NCAA Tournament like they're playing pop-a-shot.